@article{1477854, recid = {1477854}, author = {Anidjar, Gil, and Balfour, Ian, and Benyamini, Itzhak, and Blanton, Ward, and Blanton, Ward, and Boer, Roland, and Castelli, Elizabeth A., and Conzelmann, Hans, and Critchley, Simon, and Crockett, Clayton, and Deleuze, Gilles, and Engberg-Pedersen, Troels, and Gourgouris, Stathis, and Holloway, Paul A., and Kaufman, Eleanor, and Reinhard Lupton, Julia, and Reinhard, Kenneth, and Ricoeur, Paul, and Schott, Nils F., and Stowers, Stanley, and Szabari, Antónia, and Trigano, Shmuel, and Vries, Hent de, and Wasserman, Emma, and Welborn, L. L., and Wilde, Marc de, and de Vries, Hent, and Žiižek, Slavoj, }, title = {Paul and the Philosophers /}, pages = {1 online resource (608 p.)}, abstract = {The apostle Paul has reemerged as a force on the contemporary philosophical scene. Some of the most powerful recent affirmations of nonrepresentational, materialist, and event-oriented philosophies repeat topics and tropes of the ancient apostle. Paul is appropriated both for and against Kantian cosmopolitanism, psychoanalytic models of subjectivity and power, Schmittian political theologies, Derridean messianism, political universalism, and an ongoing refashioning of identity politics within postsecular contexts. This book provides the most comprehensive constellation to date of current thinking about Paul and his cultural or philosophical "afterlives" in ancient, modern, and contemporary contexts.}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/1477854}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1515/9780823292325}, }